Grace

Find a sermon associated with this topic below.

This sermon uses the story of King Saul to illustrate spiritual blind spots, which are areas of disobedience we hide from ourselves through denial, blame-shifting, and self-justification. True healing from these blind spots comes not from our own attempts at self-justification, but from humbling ourselves, confessing our sins, and finding our acceptance in the grace of Jesus Christ alone.

This sermon uses the story of Jonah to expose the sin of self-righteousness, which twists our hearts into anger and a refusal to extend God's grace to others. It presents Jesus as the "better Jonah," whose willing pursuit of His enemies and ultimate sacrifice on the cross provides a permanent solution to our self-righteousness by granting us His perfect righteousness.

This sermon teaches that sin is an underestimated, deceptive force that, like the story of Cain and Abel, hides and devours those who give in to it. It encourages believers to understand the full weight of sin in order to appreciate the magnitude of God's grace and the redemptive power of Jesus' sacrifice.

This sermon argues that genuine peace with God begins with acknowledging our enmity toward Him and accepting the reconciliation offered through Christ's sacrifice. This foundational peace leads to the peace of God, which is an unshakable inner resilience that empowers believers to face hardship and extend that same grace and forgiveness to others.

This sermon explores the pivotal question, "Who do you say I am?", asserting that Jesus is more than a good teacher; he is the promised King and the Son of the Living God. The message emphasizes that the correct answer to this question leads to a transformed life of surrender and dependence on God's grace, which makes us His beloved children and empowers us to live out our faith.

This sermon explains that true healing and restoration from sin are rooted in genuine repentance. The message emphasizes that godly repentance involves owning one's sin, uprooting its internal cause, and grieving over it in a way that leads not to self-pity, but to worship and freedom fueled by God's grace.

This sermon contrasts the detached, religious approach of the Pharisee Simon with the passionate devotion of a sinful woman. The core message is that true Christianity is not about being a "good" person but about having a personal, unconditional, and heartfelt relationship with Jesus. The depth of our love for God is directly proportional to our awareness of how much we have been forgiven by His immense and costly sacrifice.

This sermon explains that Jesus is the unexpected and ultimate light of the world, a light that shatters our preconceived notions of greatness and triumphs over spiritual darkness. The message emphasizes that this divine light is received by grace alone and that His birth as the God-man, while demanding a response of worship, also offers profound comfort and an unshakable joy.

This sermon teaches that Christian growth, or sanctification, is not about self-improvement but about living into the new identity God has already given us in Christ, who has made us dead to sin and alive to Him. The message emphasizes that this transformed life is an ongoing process of fighting sin through grace-driven effort, rooted in the assurance that God has chosen us as His beloved children and will faithfully complete the work He began.